Haven resources
The reference library for practical immigration questions.
This is where the detailed resource library lives: H-1B transfers and grace periods, visa basics, medical exam requirements, citizenship, inadmissibility, family immigration, employment green cards, humanitarian pathways, and tool reviews.
38 resources across 9 topics
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38 total resources
VisaJourney review: is this free immigration forum still worth using in 2026?
VisaJourney has been around for more than 20 years, but longevity alone does not make a tool useful. Here is where it still helps immigrants and foreign talent, where it falls short, and when it is worth using.
Why H-1B help still feels fragmented when you need it most
Most H-1B workers are not dealing with a total lack of information. They are dealing with too many partial tools that do not connect when layoffs, transfers, or deadlines hit.
Who can file Form N-400? Naturalization eligibility explained
Form N-400 is for lawful permanent residents who are eligible to naturalize, not for people who are already U.S. citizens through birth or parents. The key questions are which eligibility track applies, whether continuous residence and physical presence are intact, and whether any criminal or background issues create risk.
How do you become a U.S. citizen? Birth, parents, and naturalization explained
U.S. citizenship usually comes through one of three paths: birth in the United States, citizenship through U.S. citizen parents, or naturalization after becoming a lawful permanent resident. The details matter, especially for children born abroad and for green card holders preparing Form N-400.
Cancellation of removal explained: relief for permanent residents and nonpermanent residents
Cancellation of removal is not a general waiver form. It is a specific form of relief in immigration court for certain lawful permanent residents, certain nonpermanent residents, and some survivors of abuse who meet strict statutory requirements.
Waivers of inadmissibility explained: when forgiveness is possible and when it is not
Some inadmissibility grounds can be waived, but not all of them, and not all waivers use the same form or legal standard. This guide explains how waivers of inadmissibility work in 2026 for immigrant visas, adjustment of status, and certain nonimmigrant cases.
What happens after you file Form N-400? Interview, test, oath, and citizenship rights
After you file Form N-400, USCIS usually moves your case through biometrics handling, a naturalization interview, English and civics testing unless an exception applies, and then an oath ceremony if approved. The exact process and timing depend on the field office, the filing date, and whether you qualify for age- or disability-based exceptions.
Security, public charge, and unlawful voting as deportability grounds
Not every removal case is about a criminal conviction or an overstay. INA 237 also includes security-related grounds, a very narrow public-charge deportability rule, and unlawful-voting grounds that can apply even without a conviction.
Grounds of deportability explained: what can make someone removable after admission
Inadmissibility and deportability are related but not identical. This guide explains the main deportability grounds under INA 237 in 2026, including status violations, criminal grounds, document fraud, security issues, public charge, and unlawful voting.
Citizenship ineligibility, prior removal, and miscellaneous inadmissibility grounds explained
Some of the least intuitive inadmissibility grounds sit near the end of INA 212(a): citizenship ineligibility, prior removal and unlawful presence bars, and a mixed group of special grounds like polygamy, unlawful voting, child abduction, and tax-motivated renunciation of citizenship.
Public charge, fraud, and documentation problems: four inadmissibility grounds people mix up
Public charge, labor certification, fraud, and missing documents are separate inadmissibility issues under U.S. immigration law. This guide explains what each ground actually means in 2026 and why older explanations often blur them together.
What can make someone inadmissible to the United States?
Even if someone appears to qualify for a visa or green card, they can still be found inadmissible under U.S. immigration law. This guide explains the current inadmissibility grounds in 2026, including health, criminal, security, public-charge, fraud, prior-removal, and documentation issues.
Credible fear vs. reasonable fear: what changes in immigration screening
Credible fear and reasonable fear are both threshold screenings, but they apply in different procedural settings and lead to different next steps. This guide explains who gets which interview, what standard applies, and what happens after a positive or negative finding.
Asylum vs. withholding of removal vs. CAT: the key differences in 2026
Asylum, withholding of removal, and protection under the Convention Against Torture all can stop removal in serious fear cases, but they do not offer the same burden of proof, family benefits, or path to a green card.
Asylum vs. refugee status: who qualifies and how the U.S. process works in 2026
Asylum and refugee protection use the same core legal standard, but the process changes based on where you are, how you apply, and which rules control your case. This guide explains the difference, the current forms, deadlines, and what happens after approval.
USCIS vaccine requirements for adults: which vaccines do you need for Form I-693?
If you are preparing for a green card medical exam, the biggest adult questions are usually about polio, hepatitis B, MMR, varicella, flu, and whether one visit is enough. Here is what the current CDC and USCIS rules say.
Diversity Visa and SIJS: two lesser-known green card paths
Most people think about green cards through family, employer sponsorship, or asylum. But two other paths still matter in 2026: the Diversity Visa lottery and Special Immigrant Juvenile Status for certain children in the United States.
PERM delays feel abstract until they hit your timeline. Track these 4 things.
If your green card process depends on PERM, these are the signals worth watching and the noise you can safely ignore.
EB-5 investor green card: how the immigrant investor path works
The EB-5 path is the employment-based fifth preference category for immigrant investors. It is not a typical employer-sponsored green card. Instead, it is built around investing the required amount of capital in a qualifying U.S. commercial enterprise and creating or preserving at least 10 full-time jobs for qualifying workers.
Special immigrants for permanent residency: how the EB-4 category works
The EB-4 category is one of the less intuitive green card paths. It is for certain special immigrants, not for the typical employer-sponsored professional case, and it works under its own rules for eligibility, petitioning, and visa availability.
Self-petition options for permanent residency when abuse is involved
Some people do not have to rely on an abusive family member to start the green card process. Under VAWA, certain abused spouses, children, and parents may be able to self-petition for permanent residency without the abuser’s knowledge or consent.
Employer sponsorship for permanent residency: how employment-based green cards work
One of the main ways to get permanent residence is through an employer. The core structure is employment-based first, second, and third preference, with additional paths for special immigrants and immigrant investors. The harder part is understanding when you need labor certification, when you need Form I-140, and when self-petitioning is possible.
Laid off on H-1B? Compare your options before the clock gets tight
A decision-oriented guide to comparing transfer, change-of-status, dependent, and departure paths after an H-1B layoff.
Family sponsorship for permanent residency
If you want permanent residency through family, the first question is whether you are an immediate relative of a U.S. citizen or in a family-preference category. That one distinction affects who can sponsor whom, whether a visa is immediately available, and whether the Visa Bulletin controls the timeline.
Frequently asked questions about permanent residence through a family member
If you are trying to get a green card through a spouse, parent, child, or sibling, the biggest questions are usually about who can sponsor whom, how long it takes, what Form I-130 does, and whether there is a waiting line. This FAQ answers the common issues with current USCIS and State sources.
Humanitarian visas explained: S, T, U, and the limited V visa
If someone is in the United States because they are helping law enforcement, survived trafficking, or were harmed by qualifying criminal activity, the immigration system has specific humanitarian pathways. This guide explains the difference between S, T, U, and V visas.
H-1B transfer checklist: what to verify before you move jobs
Use this H-1B transfer checklist to pressure-test a new offer, clarify filing readiness, and avoid avoidable immigration surprises.
Temporary work visas explained: H, L, O, P, Q, and R
If you want to work in the United States for a limited period, the right visa depends on the kind of job, who is sponsoring you, and whether the work is temporary, specialized, cultural, or religious. This guide explains the main temporary work visa paths.
Student visa guide: F-1 vs M-1 vs J-1 explained
If you want to come to the United States to study, the right visa depends on the kind of program you are entering. This guide explains the difference between F-1 academic student visas, M-1 vocational student visas, and J-1 exchange visitor visas.
Short-term visa guide: passport, visa, Visa Waiver Program, and Form I-539
If you want to come to the United States temporarily, the first question is not just which visa letter applies. It is whether you need a visa at all, what your passport does, and what happens if you later need to extend or change status.
Short-term U.S. visas explained: B-1, B-2, and K-1
If you want to come to the United States temporarily, the right path depends on why you are coming. This guide explains the difference between B-1 business visitor visas, B-2 tourism visas, and the K-1 fiance visa.
H-1B transfer timeline: what usually happens and what slows it down
A step-by-step view of the H-1B transfer timeline so you can see where delays usually appear and what to prepare early.
U.S. immigration legal framework: statutes, regulations, courts, and visa categories
If U.S. immigration law feels confusing, part of the reason is that it comes from more than one place. This guide explains how Congress, executive agencies, and the courts shape immigration rules, and how visa categories fit into that structure.
What is the difference between an immigrant visa and a nonimmigrant visa?
The short answer is that an immigrant visa is for living in the United States permanently, while a nonimmigrant visa is for a temporary purpose like visiting, studying, or working. The harder part is understanding intent, dual intent, and the exceptions.
H-1B 60-day grace period: what it means and how to use it
A plain-language guide to how the 60-day grace period affects your decision window after a layoff, employer change, or sudden job loss.
Laid off on H-1B? Start with a 60-day checklist, not a panic spiral.
A practical sequence for the first week after a layoff so you protect optionality before the clock starts feeling smaller.
H-1B layoff checklist: what to do in the first 7 days
A practical first-week checklist for H-1B holders who were just laid off and need to stabilize documents, deadlines, and next actions fast.
Before you accept an H-1B transfer offer, pressure-test these details.
A transfer can solve the immediate problem fast, but the wrong assumptions about timing, location, or green card continuity create new risk.